Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Monster of Avignon says it was his WIFE’S fault he drugged her for dozens of men to rape because she refused to try ‘swinging’ and says HIS life has been ruined by trial – as court hears how he was abused as a child

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A man on trial in France for drugging his wife and inviting dozens of men to rape her over a decade told a criminal psychologist that his wife was to blame for his actions because she wouldn’t go swinging with him. 

Dominique Pelicot, 71, was excused from sitting through today’s hearing after his lawyer told the trial judge that he had suffered ‘medical problems’ over the past 48 hours for which he had not received ‘adequate treatment’.

But psychologist Annabelle Montagne told the court in Avignon this morning that she interviewed the retired electrician in December 2020 – a month and a half after he was taken into custody – where he admitted to carrying out the campaign of abuse of his wife Gisele.

‘Pelicot said: ”My wife and I had a discussion about swinging but she didn’t agree so I drugged her”,’ the psychologist recounted. 

Madame Montagne said Pelicot maintained he loved his wife, but she added: ‘He sees his partner as an object to satisfy his sexual and narcissistic needs. His wife is then a partial object and no longer an object of total love.’ 

It comes as another prison psychologist this morning told the court that Pelicot had a ‘split personality’, lacked empathy and inherited the temper of his father, who was said to be a violent abuser.

She also revealed Pelicot maintains the sickening abuse of his wife would have continued if he had not been arrested – and complained that his life had been ruined by the criminal charges brought against him.

The disturbing revelations into Pelicot’s mind were revealed before his two sons, David and Florian, took to the stand to give evidence against their father.

Dominique Pelicot is accused of recruiting men online to assault his wife repeatedly over a 10 year period 

Gisele Pelicot, 72, arrives at court in Avignon, France

Gisele Pelicot, 72, arrives at court in Avignon, France

David and Florian Pelicot enter the courtroom on the morning of Monday, September 9

David and Florian Pelicot enter the courtroom on the morning of Monday, September 9

The couple's only daughter Caroline Peyronnet told the court last week how her world fell apart when her mother called her to inform her of Mr Pelicot's crimes

The couple’s only daughter Caroline Peyronnet told the court last week how her world fell apart when her mother called her to inform her of Mr Pelicot’s crimes

Psychologist Marianne Douteau this morning told the court how her client lamented his arrest, complaining that the case against him had ruined his life and that he and his wife could have continued in a happy marriage had his misdeeds not been discovered. ‘(Pelicot) complains that this criminal case against him has destroyed his life.

‘He claims everything could have continued as before if he had been arrested. He said: ‘Gisele would not have known anything, we would have continued to be happy’.’

Madame Douteau subsequently told the court of several major events in Pelicot’s upbringing, explaining that he revealed in a lengthy February 2021 interview with her that he was raped by a hospital nurse when he was aged just nine years old.

Meanwhile, Pelicot’s father Denis was said to be a vicious wife-beater who sent his son out to work from the age of 14 and took 80 per cent of his wages. His parents also took in a young girl, whom Denis is said to have abused.

The psychologist concluded that Pelicot had inherited a personality like that of his father – angry, stubborn and impulsive.

She said: ‘Dominique Pelicot comes from a troubled family in which young children were abused.

‘[Pelicot] has a two-sided personality; he is a patriarch but he is also irresponsible and manipulative. Behind closed doors he does not respect limits.

‘He has a split personality between the person he wants to be and the person he is.

‘He does not show any empathy – but he is not inauthentic [in his expressions of love for his wife],’ she concluded.

The psychologist also explained how Pelicot admitted he was very sexually demanding and routinely sought out sex on the internet.

He told her: ‘I went on the internet every day, I was constantly on sites offering wife-swaps.’

The psychologist told how Madame Pelicot was cut off from her support network in Paris after the couple moved to the south of France in 2013 for their retirement, at which point Dominique Pelicot ramped up his heinous campaign of abuse until his eventual arrest in 2020.

Courageous Gisele Pelicot has bravely waved her right to anonymity so that the world can hear the depth of depravity her husband of 50 years sank to in order to satisfy his twisted sexual desires

Courageous Gisele Pelicot has bravely waved her right to anonymity so that the world can hear the depth of depravity her husband of 50 years sank to in order to satisfy his twisted sexual desires

The Pelicots' daughter Caroline gave evidence in a harrowing testimony last week

The Pelicots’ daughter Caroline gave evidence in a harrowing testimony last week

Pelicot fell in love with Gisele, whom he considered ‘a saint’, when they were 18-year-olds and the pair married just two years later, setting up a home in the Paris region.

They both recall having a happy marriage, although she had an affair with a work colleague some 14 years after tying the knot while he also engaged in extramarital adventures.

Pelicot trained as an electrician and worked for French energy giant EDF, but in the early 2000s decided to retrain and start a new career as an entrepreneur in real estate.

He divorced his wife in 2004 in what he described as a ‘strategic move’ to shield her from huge debts he built up in a failed business venture to become an estate agent, with the couple forced to borrow cash from various different sources.

Despite their monetary issues, the couple remarried in 2007 to huge fanfare, with Gisele’s stable income from her position as a manager in a Paris-based company meaning they were ultimately able to make ends meet.

But the picture of an idyllic marriage painted by Dominique Pelicot was torn down by his brother along with his sons David and Florian, who described their dad as an angry liar who could not stand to be contradicted and flew off the handle when he was confronted with his failings.

The case, heard in the town of Avignon in France‘s Provence, has appalled anyone who has listened to how former electrical engineer Dominique Pelicot abused his wife over a decade.

Madame Pelicot, 72, last week faced down the 51 men – including her husband – who have been accused of raping her, all of whom were stuffed into the Vaucluse Criminal Court each day as proceedings continued.

In a three-hour testimony last week, the grandmother-of-seven described the moment she learned from police officers how she was drugged unconscious and then raped by strangers as she laid motionless on the marital bed, while her husband watched on, recording the abuse on camera for his own personal pleasure.

She told the court: ‘I was subjected on the altar of vice. It’s a dead woman on a bed. This isn’t a bedroom, it’s an operating theatre. They treat me like a garbage bag, a rag doll. These aren’t sex scenes, these are rape scenes, it unbearable.’

But the defense have announced they will be filing complaints after threats were made against their clients and their relatives, according to Le Parisien.

Several lawyers of the defendants prosecuted within the trial will reportedly file their complaints later this week.

‘Personal information about the accused, their identity, surname, first name, profession, address and sometimes photos taken in the courtroom itself were disseminated on social networks, in defiance of the most basic rules of our law, the foundation of our democracy,’ lawyer Isabelle Crépin-Dehaene told the press on behalf of all her colleagues gathered behind her. 

‘The seriousness of these facts leads us, the defence lawyers, to have to refer criminal proceedings to the public prosecutor in order to prevent any new form of violence or even, which is to be feared, any attack on the physical integrity of the accused and their relatives.

‘As of this week, around fifteen complaints will be filed by the various lawyers that we are, in the hands of the territorially competent public prosecutors, others will follow in the coming weeks,’ she warned. 

In Madame Pelicot’s evidence, the couple’s only daughter Caroline Peyronnet told the court last week how her world fell apart when her mother called her to inform her of his crimes.

Her agony was compounded when detectives discovered Mr Pelicot had also taken photographs of Caroline lying motionless on a bed in her mother’s underwear.

Madame Peyronnet, 45, described her father as ‘one of the worst sexual predators of the last 20 years.’

The trial has heard that Pelicot’s perversion was only discovered after he was arrested for taking photos up women’s skirts at a supermarket near the couple’s home in the pretty village of Mazan, in the shadow of Mont Ventoux in September 2020.

A police search of his computer discovered 20,000 homemade films and photographs of men he met on the internet raping his wife dating back to 2011.

Detectives traced 50 of some 84 men that Pelicot had met on a now-defunct website and invited to his home to carry out the abuse.

Madame Pelicot, 72, last week faced down the 51 men – including her husband – accused of her rape

Madame Pelicot, 72, last week faced down the 51 men – including her husband – accused of her rape

Madame Pelicot, 72, relived the trauma that she experienced when police investigator showed her graphic films of her being raped repeatedly by her husband Dominique and more than 80 strangers while she was unconscious

Madame Pelicot, 72, relived the trauma that she experienced when police investigator showed her graphic films of her being raped repeatedly by her husband Dominique and more than 80 strangers while she was unconscious

Madame Pelicot is determined that the public knows that she played no part in her husband's warped sexual fantasies that he played out at their picturesque chalet home in the Provence village of Mazan (pictured)

Madame Pelicot is determined that the public knows that she played no part in her husband’s warped sexual fantasies that he played out at their picturesque chalet home in the Provence village of Mazan (pictured)

They discovered that Pelicot routinely put powerful sedatives in his wife’s drink and food to render her unconscious for when her abusers arrived at the family home under cover of darkness.

Pelicot urged the men to sneak into the modest country chalet and undress in the kitchen to leave no trace.

Then, he turned on the camera and filmed as each man inflicted their terrible abuse on his wife, before meticulously filing and cataloguing the home moves under various skin-crawling titles.

The men, all from the Provence area of the south of France, are aged between 26 and 73 and include a fireman, a nurse, a civil servant, a plumber, a soldier and a journalist.

Detective traced 50 of these men and together with Pelicot, charged them all with rape.

Some 16 of the accused, including Pelicot, have admitted the offence.

But 35 maintain they are innocent, with one man telling police he believed Madame Pelicot had consented as her husband was present.

Pelicot faces up to 20 years in jail. The other men face shorter sentences if found guilty.

The trial is set to last until December.

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